ARTS Friday, April 5, 1991 'The Michigan Daily Page 5 Spring into dance with Spriggs x by Justine Unatin She danced in her chair, snapped her fingers, and wiggled her arms in the air while rat-tat-tatting the rhythms of musical accompaniment. However, this wasn't a perfor- mance, but my interview with dancer/choreographer Linda Spriggs. "That's what we are as people, en- ergy," she said, simultaneously em- bodying her words. Spriggs will set this same vivacity and creativity to music this weekend in An Evening of Dance with Linda Spriggs and Friends. The performance will in- Sclude six pieces from Sprigg's repertoire as well as works by Gary Abbott and Vera Embree. Spriggs and Friends will harness the power of movement and let it rip in a dance-o-rama of emotional and physical energy. According to Spriggs, the show will present very humanistic and straightforward ideas rather than specifically social or personal themes. "I don't like to keep the audience guessing," Spriggs said. "I dance what (the audiences) feel." Spriggs uses this philosophy in her four solo works, including "From the Heart" and "I to Eye." Sprigg's goal in these pieces is to become like the physical and emo- tional heart of the audience. She hopes to transmit the feelings re- lated to the difficult experience of soul searching. Much of her energy will be focused toward conveying other loose, broad themes, such as the experience of dreams or the pass- ing of time. As Spriggs describes, the themes were not fabricated, but rather arose naturally from the most prevalent experiences and spontaneous feelings within herself and the other choreographers. Spriggs and Abbott both take one leap further to abandon theme altozether. Snriyizs will dance in a go-with-the-flow no-theme piece ti- tled "Interlude," while Abbott will present his own bit of undeci- pherable mish-mash in "Abscrap." Spriggs describes her piece as one of "pure movement, pure dance," re- sulting from her natural and free engagement with the seemingly formless and dissonant music. The piece exemplifies her love of movement merely for movement's sake. Spriggs also offers a bit of ad- vice concerning the most abstract excerpts of the show - just sit back and take them for what they is. The flexibility characterizing the thematic structure of the show holds true for the stylistic and mu- sical elements as well. Spriggs and Friends will offer a melange of tunes ranging from "abstract" pre- pared piano to the popular sounds of New Age and jazz favorites. The choreography will follow suit with transitions between balletic. mod- ern and ethnic movements. Of course, a dash of spice will be added in "Dream Variation," which will include a reading of four poems written by poet Langston Hughes. Spriggs says she plans to per- form her part in the show by ex- pressing emotion and physical en- ergy "through every pore of my be- ing." In turn, she hopes that the au- dience will relax and let themselves be swept away by the dances. The levity of the performance should not emotionally exhaust the audi- ence, but, as Spriggs says, "Leave 'em wantin' more." AN EVENING OF DANCE WITH LINDA SPRIGGS AND FRIENDS will be performed Saturday at 8 p.m. and Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Dance Building's Studio A Theater. Tickets are $7, $5 for students. For more information, call 763-5460.. The Feelies Time For a Witness Coyote/A&M Although The Good Earth was more deeply rooted in the rural pas- toral sounds of suburban Jersey, this is the Feelies' "roots" album. The band has always believed, not entirely inappropriately, that music began with "Sister Ray." On previous albums this was disguised by a percussion team more concerned with creating textures than with propulsion, but on Time For a Witness both the tempestuous force and mind-racking distortion of "Sister Ray" come to the forefront. The opening tune, "Waiting," sets the tone for the record with characteristic Velvets chord struc- tures and faint ancestral echoes of the guitar flip-outs of Sonic Youth and the dry-wit vocal style of Thurston Moore. Later on, the quasi-Eastern mysticism of The Doors provides the setting for Vel- vets guitar licks and Sgt. Pepper psychedelicized harmonies. But it's the influence of the Stooges that defines the record. Time For a Witness has a noticeably harder edge than any of their previ- ous records, with razor smooth Ron Asheton riffs, an overwhelming bass, the Sufi drone of "We Will Fall" and a cover of "Real Cool Time." While Glenn Mercer's vo- cals on "Real Cool Time" aim for more Lou Reed style detachment than Iggy's screaming angst, his so- lution to his confusion is signifi- cantly different than either. Although they still seem to be hopeless geeks hiding behind a Bob Mould-esque supersonic wall of sound, their new batch of songs sug- gest a moralizing confidence born of urgency. The narrator of "For Now," the most definitively Feel- ies song on the record, goes from ut- tering "nuthin' happenin' at all" and "no rest in a restless world" to tentatively declaring "It's alright/ Yeah, it's my life/ It's O.K./ Better off that way." The characteristic fragile and pining lyricism of old surfaces only on "Find a Way," and the "perpetual nervousness" of Crazy Rhythms has mutated into a more accessible version of 4/4. -Peter Shapiro Manufacture Voice of World Control Nettwerk/IRS It's ironic that Manufacture would title their new record Voice of World Control, since they're a band that does not generally have their own voice. Sure, they may use a guest vocalist on a few songs (or rather, singles) on a given album, but the bulk of the songs are sam- *e ple-driven industrial tunes. The problem that plagues the band is that their songs with guest vocals tend to be overly pop-ish, seemingly gold bond cleaners aimed at the "college-music" charts, while the rest are passable, but not particularly memorable Front 242-like tunes (without any vocals). This was the case with the band's last album, which featured the great single "As the End Draws Near," with vocals courtesy of a guest fe- male singer (no, I don't remember her name). This time around, the band recruits Nigel Butler, who sounds so similar to Dave Gahan that the unsuspecting listener could easily think that he or she was lis- tening to Violator. If someone were to suggest that this was a shrewd marketing scheme designed to lure in unaware Depeche Mode-lovin' record buyers, I'd be inclined to agree. This is not to say that the rest of the record is garbage. As mentioned, the band owes a great stylistic debt to Front 242 and other similar bands. The songs here feature state of the art technology coupled with a pretty decent dance beat. It's fair, but not very exciting stuff. A few songs, such as "The Bogey" and "Drug Squad," stand on their own merits, but for the most part the record is forgettable. If they try harder next time around, however, Manufacture has the potential to do Jesus Jones Doubt SBK Something about Jesus Jones reminds me of my high school days. Not that they sound much like the 'new wave"t bands that were popular at the time (e.g. Duran Du- ran and New Order) but something about their whole "aura" suggests that they're on the lists of the cur- rent crop of high school hep cats. Something about this band screams "required listening" to the left- over teenager in me. They sound like what would've happened if some of those new wave dinosaurs had man- aged to roll with the changes and in- corporate some of the current "hip" elements into their sound (e.g. hip- hop beats, samplers, etc.) into their sounds. Needless to say, it seems a bit corny now. But once one gets past all these superficial impressions, one finds that Doubt and to a greater degree the band's first album, Liquidizer, is actually pretty good. The songs aren't world-changing great, but they're not bad; they're standard "alternative" rock tunes tailored to be a product - but an enjoyable product nonetheless. Some of them, such as "Who? Where? why?" even demonstrate that the band has a pretty good grasp of the art of drum machine programming and have some dance floor potential. The problem is singer/guitarist Mike Edwards. His voice just doesn't cut it; it's too raspy and sounds as if he's straining to get the notes out. This works to his advantage on a few songs, such as "International Bright Young Thing," which has harmonies that are so bad, they're good, and the sin- gle "Right Here, Right Now." But on slower tunes, like "Welcome Back Victoria," the flaws in Edwards' voice become all too readily apparent. In the end, Jesus Jones is destined to roam that part of the Earth that, say, Love and Rockets, are doomed to: the land of pretty good, innovative stuff that nonetheless, just doesn't approach long-term staying power. Not that more than a few people won't buy their records in the meantime. -Mike Molitor Keeping up with the Smiths Used to be, back in the '70s, a woman named Patti Smith (not Patty Smythe, you morons) burst into a ho-hum music scene and blew it apart with a vengeance. She put out lots of raucous albums worthy of being deemed masterpieces, graced the stage of a bar called Second Chance on a regular basis to showcase her amazing tunes, and life was just that much cooler. Now Wayne Kramer is free and the High Priestess of Punk has gone on to live a much more subdued life, raising some kids and writing some poetry. And Second Chance has evolved (or devolved) into the Nectarine Ballroom. But Smith is back for one more round - and a worthy cause. As a swan song to the end of an era -this will be the Nectarine's last live show, at least for a while - Smith and a host of other icons are playing neon heaven in a benefit for AIDS research. . Oh, yeah. Fred Smith will be there too. (And Scott Morgan and Scott Asheton and Lenny Kaye and Jay Daugherty, as well.) Doors open at 9 p.m. and tix are $15 (p.e.s.c.), available at TicketMaster. (Copyrighted photograph by Robert Mapplethorpe, courtesy of Robert Miller Gallery and the Fotofolio Corporation) I- ACADEMY AWARD 1 a WINNER! C YEACN0 ;:.y D E B E G E R A C A film by JEAN-PAL. g J PERFECT STEREO RAPPENEAU MOMWn ' lIW CA-iC 2 .5DAILY SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM & ALL DAY TUESDAY 7J T EXCEPTIONS) 761.9700 STUDENT WITH I. '3.50 Study Social Sciences in London Study Year Abroad, Postgraduate Diplomas, One-Year Master's Degrees and Research Opportunities in the Social Sciences. Subjects include:- Accounting and Finance " Actuarial Science * Business Studies * Economics * Econometrics * Economic History " European Studies " Geography " Government'" Health Planning " Housing a Industrial Relations * Information Systems . International Historye International Relations .Law " Management *Operational Research* Philosophy, Logic & Scientific Method ePopulation Studies Politics " Regional & Urban Planning " Sea Use Policy* Social Administration " Social Anthropology " Social Plan- ning in Developing countries " Social Work " Sociology. Social Psychology * Statistics & Mathematical Sciences. Application forms from: Assistant Registrar (cASS), Room H616, London School of Economics and Political Science Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, England stating whether undergraduate or postgraduate I GONE WITH THE WIND C L A S S I C S &arring: Clark Gable Where can you hear Der Rosenkavalier, Cosifan tutte, and Aida in one evening? Featuring School of Music voice faculty singing selections from your favorite operas Power Center Saturday, Apr. 6 at 8 PM Tickets: $12 wt ,.Charge by phone: 764-0450 Students: $5 with ID at the League Ticket Office U. Symphony Orchestra, U. Choir Conducted by Gustav Meier Registrar's Bulletin BoardANONIG ANNOUNCING: The TIME SCHEDULE is now accessible from MERIT Here's how to call it up: (VT100 emulation required) 1. At the "which Host?" prompt type UM-OASINFO and press Enter (return). This will display the UM Data Systems Center Public Menu. 2. At the command position type UMIPS and press Enter (return). This will display the University of Michigan Information Posting System Menu. 3. At the command position type TSCH and press Enter (return). This will display a term selection screen. 4. At the command position type the keyword (Term) which you wish to view. This will display the first page of the TIME SCHEDULE for the selected term. ...« ... '1 TIf1'T'T T'C ., 2 a !